But this would be the least of the causes of anxiety to the Roman governor, as he spent year after year face to face with these terrible leaders of a terrible people.
These high priests and rulers of the Jews were indeed quite another kind of adversaries8 from the leaders, secular9 or religious, of any of those conquered countries which the Romans were wont10 to treat with contemptuous toleration. They still represented living traditions of the glory and sanctity of their nation, and of Jerusalem, and exercised still a power over that nation which the most resolute11 and ruthless of Roman procurators did not care wantonly to brave.
At the same time the yoke of high priest and scribe and Pharisee was even heavier on the necks of their own people than that of the Roman. They had built up a huge superstructure of traditions and ceremonies round the law of Moses, which they held up to the people as more sacred and binding12 than the law itself. This superstructure was their special charge. This was, according to them, the great national inheritance, the most valuable portion of the covenant13 which God had made[288] with their fathers. To them, as leaders of their nation—a select, priestly, and learned caste—this precious inheritance had been committed. Outside that caste, the dim multitude, “the people which knoweth not the law,” were despised while they obeyed, accursed as soon as they showed any sign of disobedience. Such being the state of Judea, it would not be easy to name in all history a less hopeful place for the reforming mission of a young carpenter, a stranger from a despised province, one entirely14 outside the ruling caste, though of the royal race, and who had no position whatever in any rabbinical school.
In Galilee the surroundings were slightly different, but scarcely more promising15. Herod Antipas, the weakest of that tyrant16 family, the seducer17 of his brother’s wife, the fawner on C?sar, the spendthrift oppressor of the people of his tetrarchy, still ruled in name over the country, but with Roman garrisons18 in the cities and strongholds. Face to face with him, and exercising an imperium in imperio throughout Galilee were the same priestly caste, though far less formidable to the civil power and to the people, than in the southern province. Along the western coast of the Sea of Galilee, the chief scene of our Lord’s northern ministry19, lay a net-work of towns densely20 inhabited, and containing a large admixture of Gentile traders. This infusion21 of foreign blood, the want of any such religious centre as Jerusalem, and the contempt with which the southern Jews regarded[289] their provincial22 brethren of Galilee, had no doubt loosened to some extent the yoke of the priests and scribes and lawyers in that province. But even here their traditionary power over the masses of the people was very great, and the consequences of defying their authority as penal23, though the penalty might be neither so swift or so certain, as in Jerusalem itself. Such was the society into which Christ came.
It is not easy to find a parallel case in the modern world, but perhaps the nearest exists in a portion of our own empire. The condition of parts of India in our day resembles in some respects that of Palestine in the year A. D. 30. In the Mahratta country, princes, not of the native dynasty, but the descendants of foreign courtiers (like the Idumean Herods), are reigning24. British residents at their courts, hated and feared, but practically all-powerful as Roman procurators, answer to the officers and garrisons of Rome in Palestine. The people are in bondage25 to a priestly caste scarcely less heavy than that which weighed on the Judean and Galilean peasantry. If the Mahrattas were Mohammedans, and Mecca were situate in the territory of Scindia or Holkar; if the influence of twelve centuries of Christian26 training could be wiped out of the English character, and the stubborn and fierce nature of the Jew substituted for that of the Mahratta; a village reformer amongst them, whose preaching outraged27 the Brahmins, threatened the dynasties, and disturbed the English residents,[290] would start under somewhat similar conditions to those which surrounded Christ when he commenced his ministry.
In one respect, and one only, the time seemed propitious28. The mind and heart of the nation was full of the expectation of a coming Messiah—a King who should break every yoke from off the necks of his people, and should rule over the nations, sitting on the throne of David. The intensity29 of this expectation had, in the opening days of his ministry, drawn30 crowds into the wilderness31 beyond Jordan from all parts of Judea and Galilee, at the summons of a preacher who had caught up the last cadence32 of the song of their last great prophet, and was proclaiming that both the deliverance and the kingdom which they were looking for were at hand. In those crowds who flocked to hear John the Baptist there were doubtless some even amongst the priests and scribes, and many amongst the poor Jewish and Galilean peasantry, who felt that there was a heavier yoke upon them than that of Rome or of Herod Antipas. But the record of the next three years shows too clearly that even these were wholly unprepared for any other than a kingdom of this world, and a temporal throne to be set up in the holy city.
And so, from the first, Christ had to contend not only against the whole of the established powers of Palestine, but against the highest aspirations33 of the best of his countrymen. These very Messianic hopes, in fact,[291] proved the greatest stumbling-block in his path. Those who entertained them most vividly34 had the greatest difficulty in accepting the carpenter’s son as the promised Deliverer. A few days only before the end he had sorrowfully to warn the most intimate and loving of his companions and disciples35, “Ye know not what spirit ye are of.”
点击收听单词发音
1 yoke | |
n.轭;支配;v.给...上轭,连接,使成配偶 | |
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2 galling | |
adj.难堪的,使烦恼的,使焦躁的 | |
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3 peculiar | |
adj.古怪的,异常的;特殊的,特有的 | |
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4 mosaic | |
n./adj.镶嵌细工的,镶嵌工艺品的,嵌花式的 | |
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5 guardians | |
监护人( guardian的名词复数 ); 保护者,维护者 | |
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6 hierarchy | |
n.等级制度;统治集团,领导层 | |
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7 mere | |
adj.纯粹的;仅仅,只不过 | |
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8 adversaries | |
n.对手,敌手( adversary的名词复数 ) | |
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9 secular | |
n.牧师,凡人;adj.世俗的,现世的,不朽的 | |
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10 wont | |
adj.习惯于;v.习惯;n.习惯 | |
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11 resolute | |
adj.坚决的,果敢的 | |
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12 binding | |
有约束力的,有效的,应遵守的 | |
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13 covenant | |
n.盟约,契约;v.订盟约 | |
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14 entirely | |
ad.全部地,完整地;完全地,彻底地 | |
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15 promising | |
adj.有希望的,有前途的 | |
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16 tyrant | |
n.暴君,专制的君主,残暴的人 | |
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17 seducer | |
n.诱惑者,骗子,玩弄女性的人 | |
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18 garrisons | |
守备部队,卫戍部队( garrison的名词复数 ) | |
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19 ministry | |
n.(政府的)部;牧师 | |
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20 densely | |
ad.密集地;浓厚地 | |
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21 infusion | |
n.灌输 | |
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22 provincial | |
adj.省的,地方的;n.外省人,乡下人 | |
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23 penal | |
adj.刑罚的;刑法上的 | |
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24 reigning | |
adj.统治的,起支配作用的 | |
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25 bondage | |
n.奴役,束缚 | |
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26 Christian | |
adj.基督教徒的;n.基督教徒 | |
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27 outraged | |
a.震惊的,义愤填膺的 | |
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28 propitious | |
adj.吉利的;顺利的 | |
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29 intensity | |
n.强烈,剧烈;强度;烈度 | |
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30 drawn | |
v.拖,拉,拔出;adj.憔悴的,紧张的 | |
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31 wilderness | |
n.杳无人烟的一片陆地、水等,荒漠 | |
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32 cadence | |
n.(说话声调的)抑扬顿挫 | |
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33 aspirations | |
强烈的愿望( aspiration的名词复数 ); 志向; 发送气音; 发 h 音 | |
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34 vividly | |
adv.清楚地,鲜明地,生动地 | |
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35 disciples | |
n.信徒( disciple的名词复数 );门徒;耶稣的信徒;(尤指)耶稣十二门徒之一 | |
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